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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > The Bible > Bible readings or selections
For those new to Christian life, the Bible is often an imposing
book filled with tales of pregnant virgins, large fish,
unbelievable miracles, and challenging stretches of the
imagination. It is a daunting task to make sense of biblical
narrative and to convey what the story is attempting to do, but
skilled storyteller Frank Honeycutt brings lively, fresh
interpretations to old stories - and readers will come away with
both understanding and inspiration.Conveniently arranged by seasons
of the church year, newcomers and life-long Christians alike will
encounter the Bible stories of Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent,
Easter, and time after Pentecost in a whole new way. The stories
explored include: Desert Highway Home, Isaiah 40:3; Surrogate
Messiahs, John 1:19-20; Love at First Sight, Matthew 4:20; Boating
Tips for Night Crossings, Matthew 14:22; and many more.
This book encompasses all major events recorded in the Bible
fromthe destruction of the planet Earth between the first two
versesof Genesis; the new doctrine of the Age of Grace delivered to
theApostle Paul by Jesus Christ himself; details of the Great
Tribulation asprophesied by Daniel; the believers of today reigning
with Jesus in hisMillennial Kingdom and the new heaven and earth,
where the streets arepaved with gold. Get ready for the "read" of
your life
"Fred Wolfe has dedicated his life to examining the history,
practice, andinterpretation of the word of God. Th e Bible is too
oft en misquoted, and this book will help to shed light on some
common misconceptions, challenging the reader to strengthen their
understanding of God. Withscholarly evidence and reasoning, he has
writt en a blueprint of theBible's inception, as well as the
deepest meanings of its words. By closelyexamining one's
understanding of the word of God, they will fi nd a faithand
clarity so absolute that it can never be shaken. Th is book is a
must read, no matt er where one is in their walk with God."-Pastor
Matt hew Barnett, Co-Founder of the Dream Center
"Roloff has produced an intrepretation of the Revelation of John
that can be certain to gain the special interest of theologians
because of his . . . emphasis on the Christological starting-point
of Revelation and the perspective that this discloses for the
Christian community." -- Hans-Friedrich Weiss "In this commentary,
one catches the Revelator's vision of eternity ablaze with promise
and expectation of accountability in the bleakness of the present.
May this book find many who are willing to dialog with the
Revelator." -- Frederick Danker
Galatians 3:28, in particular the phrase, "There is ...no longer
male and female; for you all are one in Christ Jesus," would seem
to point towards an ethos of gender equality among Christians.
Acting on this assumption, a number of scholars have considered the
phrase significant in reconstructing attitudes towards women in
early Christianity. Until now, however, a study of the history of
interpretation of Gal 3:28 has been lacking. The exploration of the
post-New Testament career of the verse is therefore the focus of
this book. The approach is historical-critical, discussing the
exegesis of Gal 3:28 in the context of attitudes about the roles of
women in the first four centuries CE.
This study reveals that early Christians did not always approach
this verse with the same concerns as modern readers. Ancient
commentators brought several different questions to their
discussion of Gal 3:28, and it is impossible to discover the
trajectory in exegesis of this verse that might have been expected.
It becomes apparent that during the first four centuries of
Christianity most writers treated Gal 3:28 as a statement about the
identification of Christians with Christ and therefore an
indication that in the resolution of various differences into
unity, they could achieve an ideal state. While some writers
applied this concept to status differences between men and women,
others used it to discuss the qualities of the ideal disciple, the
character of the first created human beings, the state of the
believer in heaven, and even the nature of God.
The Message of Isaiah 40-55 traces the argument of Isaiah 40-55 to
show how the chapters bring a message of encouragement and
challenge about God's intention to restore the Judean community,
some of whose members are in exile in Babylon, others living in the
city of Jerusalem that has lain devastated since it fell to the
Babylonians in 587. The chapters hold before this community's eyes
a vision of the nature of its God as the powerful creator and the
loving restorer. In the course of following the argument, the
reader becomes aware that the chapters have to deal with their
audience's mysterious resistance to their message. It cannot give
God the kind of response the message needs and deserves, nor can it
fulfil the role as God's servant that is designed for it. God
nevertheless remains committed to it. The prophet eventually
becomes aware of a distinctive personal calling to embody that
response, until the people are ready to do so. It is the prophet's
willingness to do this (notwithstanding the suffering it brings)
that embodies the kind of ministry that needs to be exercised to
them so that they may be brought back to God and find a restoration
of spirit, as well as a physical restoration.
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Lamentations
(Hardcover)
Allsopp F.W. Dobbs
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R880
R759
Discovery Miles 7 590
Save R121 (14%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The destruction of Jerusalem in 586 BC, which led to the exile of
the people of Israel, drastically changed the community's life. In
the midst of this darkness, the five poems collected to form the
biblical Book of Lamentations emerged as a life-embracing work.
This commentary aims to make the message of Lamentations come alive
to Christians today. The distinctiveness of the Palestinian voice
found in these poems is maintained as they bear witness to the
horror of pain and human suffering. Yet, beneath the words, a
determined will to live emerges to confront human suffering, probe
God's actions and anticipate a new kind of human community.
The keenly awaited second volume completing this major commentary
on 2 Corinthians. Volume II covers chapters 8-13. Dr Thrall
provides an exegetical verse-by-verse exposition and addresses all
historical, linguistic and theological issues. This volume also
contains two concluding essays, on the nature of the opposition
Paul faced in the Corinthian church, and on Paul's understanding of
apostleship, as well as excursuses on particular topics such as the
question of Paul's Roman citizenship. The two volumes of this
commentary now form the most comprehensive and up-to-date work
available on 2 Corinthians.
In this important addition to the Old Testament Library, now
available in a new casebound edition, renowned scholar Brevard
Childs writes on the Old Testament's most important theological
book. He furnishes a fresh translation from the Hebrew and
discusses questions of text, philology, historical background, and
literary architecture, and then proceeds with a critically
informed, theological interpretation of the text. The Old Testament
Library provides fresh and authoritative treatments of important
aspects of Old Testament study through commentaries and general
surveys. The contributors are scholars of international standing.
Using both ancient and modern rhetoric, linguistics, and
argumentation theory, this study offers a fresh approach to 1 Peter
and New Testament ethics. It is often claimed that the growing
interest in paraenesis, or ethical teaching, among early Christians
indicates how Jesus' revolutionary teaching and the Pauline notion
of justification by faith were gradually replaced by an emphasis on
good works and ethics borrowed from the surrounding Hellenistic and
Jewish culture. The Motivation of the Paraenesis challenges this
traditional view of ethics in early Christianity, arguing that
paraenesis was an original, essential part of early Christian
doctrine and life. The book also provides a new, well-balanced
picture of 1 Peter and its message, giving a natural interpretation
to many puzzling sections and clarifying the internal logic of the
text and the theology behind it.>
Whether dealing with collective catastrophe or intimate trauma,
recovering from emotional and physical hurt is hard. Kathleen
O'Connor shows that although Jeremiah's emotionally wrought
language can aggravate readers' memories of pain, it also documents
the ways an ancient community-and the prophet personally-sought to
restore their collapsed social world. Both prophet and book provide
a traumatized community language to articulate disaster; move
self-understanding from delusional security to identity as
survivors; constitute individuals as responsible moral agents;
portray God as equally afflicted by disaster; and invite a
reconstruction of reality.
Here Andrew Macintosh provides a major introduction, followed by
translation and verse-by-verse commentary to Hosea. Incorporating
up-to-date evidence from archaeology and the Dead Sea Scrolls, as
well as the insights of more recent major commentaries, he places
particular emphasis on the work of the Rabbinic authorities and
especially that of Ibn Janah. He reveals important new evidence
concerning the meaning of Hosea's dialectical language to provide
an indispensable reference for scholars, students and clergy.
This comprehensive bibliography to scholarly works on the biblical
book of Esther contains over 1500 references. It includes titles of
books, collected works, Festschriften, theses, journal articles,
essays in collections, encyclopedia and dictionary articles, and
online material. It is a classified bibliography, arranged in three
categories -- commentaries, biblical chapters and verses, and
subject headings in alphabetical order. The scope of the
bibliography is international, and its focus is on research from
the last hundred years. Scholars, students, clergy, and librarians
-- among them literary scholars, sociologists, historians,
linguists, art historians, feminists, and Christian and Jewish
scholars -- will find this unique volume an indispensable resource
and stimulus to further research.
Paul's first letter to the Corinthians was addressed originally
to a fledgling mission church in Corinth. Paul's absence from the
church had allowed serious problems to arise within the Corinthian
community, but the problems that he addresses in this letter do not
always seem based on explicitly theological ideas. The brilliance
of Paul, though, is that he frames the issues in theological terms
and reflects on them in the light of the gospel.
"Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching"
is a distinctive resource for those who interpret the Bible in the
church. Planned and written specifically for teaching and preaching
needs, this critically acclaimed biblical commentary is a major
contribution to scholarship and ministry.
Now available in English for the first time, Augustine's Commentary on Galatians is his only complete, formal commentary on any book of the Bible and offers unique insights into his understanding of Paul and of his own task as a biblical interpreter. In addition to an English translation with facing Latin text, Eric Plumer provides a comprehensive introduction and copious notes.
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